3. In the Summer of 2007 the North Pole's Arctic Ocean
flushed out its ice. The Arctic Ocean turned
into what is called Pancake ice, small pieces of ice that may be as
large as a state or as small as your yard. The Arctic Ice Cap
is normally a single unit of ice that prevents it from being flushed
out of the Arctic Ocean. But in 2007 the smaller pancake ice allowed
the ice to be flushed out of the Arctic Ocean taking with it the
algae and plankton that grows under it. Because of this loss
in algae and plankton, the Krill, a shrimp like creature, had no
food and it is now claimed that 80% of the Krill have died.
The Krill are the major food source for seals, whales, salmon and
other sea life in the Arctic Regions. There was one article
that was titled, "Salmon 40 per pound." Have you ever watched
the program, "The Deadliest Catch." Well, the deadliest catch
is the fishing expedition that brings back no fish.
Discover Science and Conservation, 80% Reduction of Biomass of Krill:
Polar Discovery, The Circle of Life:
NewScientist, Farmed Salmon threat to Antarctic Krill:
Warming Pacific Hurts Food Chain:

4. In the costal waters of France, 2008, they are having an
80% to 100% loss of oysters due to a herpes like virus. This
is causing a food shortage right now, but they are saying the real
food shortage will come two years from now. Already it is bad enough
that many restaurants are closing because a lick of oysters.
If this is happening in France, as the report states, other
Mediterranean states are having the same problem.

6. Ethanol is using anywhere from 10% to 20% of American
corn for the production of this alternate fuel source. In some
countries, there is a 50% usage of their crops to be sold as fuel,
reducing the amount of food for our worlds ever growing population.
In some countries the rice s have inflated to more than 600%
making the Dollar a day wage not enough to feed their families.
Recent television articles, on Free Speech TV, said that it takes 10
calories of carbon fuel to make one calorie of Alcohol Fuel. This
means that we are far better off not using the Gasohol at all. For every
gallon of Ethanol (Gasohol) we are using ten gallons of carbon fuel to make it.

8. Midwestern U.S. Floods destroyed more than nine million
acres of farm land. In the summer of 2008 tremendous rains,
called the five hundred year flood, has destroyed huge
sections of farm land. One of the suspects in this five
hundred year flood were the fires in California creating
condensation nuclei for rain droplets to form, just like seeding a
cloud. This resulted in a huge loss of crops in Iowa, Missouri
and Illinois. But the floods and droughts are both getting
worse.

9. Glacial Melt. Many of the rivers around the world are
fed by glaciers. Glaciers store the water from snow in the
winter to be used to feed the rivers in the summer. In the
Tibetan Plateau, over the past ten years, the glaciers are two
thirds gone. These glaciers feed the huge Yellow and Yangtze
Rivers in China which are used to irrigate the rice fields for the
1.4 billion population. these same glaciers, on the other side
of the Tibetan Plateau, feed the rivers flowing into the one billion
plus population of India. When these glaciers are gone, the
food supply is gone and billions of people will have nothing to eat.
This is happening all over the world. One glacier that I
climbed in Longyearbyen Norway was two thousand feet thick in 2005.
In 2006 the glacier was gone.
PlanetExtinction.com, Collapse of Greenland Glaciers.

10. Dead zones in the oceans. These dead zones are
caused by pollution of various types flowing from the mouths of
rivers emptying into the ocean. For example the Mississippi
River dumps into the Gulf of Mexico and there is a two hundred mile
dead zone as a result. The source of the pollution was traced
to the use of tiles so farmers can drain and make more land usable
for farming. The herbicides, insecticides, and mainly the
fertilizers that are used to enhance the growth of the crops are
causing algae to grow around the mouth of the Mississippi depleting
the oxygen content of the water and causing the fish and shellfish
to die. The tiles also reduce the amount of ground water and
subterranean aquifers are drying up as mentioned with the Ogallala
Aquifer. Also the plastic bottles are accumulating in
the oceans. A recent TV program said that in these mid ocean garbage
patches that they were finding, in 2010, that there are 46 parts of micro
plastic particles than there were plankton. The plankton is the very
bottom of the food chain and now the filter feeding fish are eating 46 times
more plastic than food, in these ocean garbage patches around the world.

11. Rising sea levels are now invading lowlandswith
salt and brackish water preventing many plants from growing.
This is happening in the southern United States, Bangladesh. and in
many parts of southeast Asia. As the glaciers and surface ice
melts, the sea level rises. As the polar ice melts, the oceans have
a tendency to raise in temperature and also rise in volume. This is
a cycle that Global Warming is causing and if we don't immediately
do something to stop it, we don't have a chance.

12.
What is the Amero Dollar? The Amero Dollar is the new
currency for North America, which include Canada, the United States
and Mexico. This new currency will completely replace the
dollar and leave North America with a single currency.

Step by step and in an ever increasing rate, we are losing our
life giving sources of food that we need to feed the ever growing
population of planet earth. We are sucking everything out of
the ground and from under the ground and putting it into the air and
oceans. We are seeing the effects of Global Warming and Global
Climate Change right now and we need to act NOW! With man's
influence in the temperatures of the earth, combined with the
natural temperature cycles and all in coincidence of the increase of
other pollutants, increase in population, destruction of carbon
storage mechanisms, wars, political unrest, social pollution, and
the increase in the intensity of solar storms, we are going to have
a very rough ride on a soon to be sinking ship, the spaceship Earth.

Click Here's just a quick thought that I was writing to my friend about
the thoughts of animals. 4-5-2009

But here's one for you
about what happened last night. The thunderstorms were really
coming into the area. They came in three waves and between the
waves the sky cleared out and we had the stars and moon shining. My
mom's dog is still staying in her house and I keep the heat off and
the back door open so she can come and go as she wishes. All of a
sudden, as we could the thunder of the first storm approaching, she
came to the garage and started to bark for me. I've watched this
for years because she would do the same thing on regular basis. All
of the time I thought that she was scared and wanted me to come and
keep her company. Last night, I realized something that I have
never realized before. She was coming to tell me a storm was coming
and to check to see if I was alright. She was indeed scared, but
she was trying to warn me and check up on me.

My brother used to live in Viet Nam for three and a half years,
in the Philippines for a year, Korea for a year, Ethiopia for a
year, Alaska for a year and I'm not sure where else. So he's always
been around. He was telling me about what happened in Thailand when
the tsunami hit. He said that some people were sitting at a picnic
table and a black bird kept coming up to the table, over and over
again, yelling at them. Of course we are humans and what can a bird
tell a human. He was telling them that there was a danger coming
and to leave, NOW! My brother went on to say that after the
tsunami hit they didn't find a single animal body among the dead.
All of the animals went inland ahead of time because they knew about
the danger.

Today I was thinking on how did these animals know that there was
an approaching danger. A long time ago, I was reading about the
whales before motorboats. The book said that the whales were able
to talk, maybe, across the ocean. After motor boats the article
said that due to propeller noise, they were able to talk about
twelve hundred miles. After sonar was introduced, they said that
the communications were limited to, sometimes, four hundred miles.
Now, my thoughts started to come together. How did these animals
know about the tsunami. The scientific programs that I watched
talked about the changing waves that went through the ground and
maybe the animals could sense these long waves and discriminate the
difference between them. I'm starting to think differently now.
Maybe this is because we cannot understand a single word that an
animal says. They can understand our language, but we're so smart
that we can't understand their language. There is a possibility
that the whales sent out messages that there was an earthquake under
seas and other sea animals, hundreds of miles away, communicated
this to the land animals and the birds, who then did the same
throughout their communities. This is what the blackbird was trying
to tell the people at the picnic table.

One person that I would really like to meet is David Suzuki.
Someday, if I ever go to Washington, I may be able to head north and
track him down. He did a study of the wolves in Northern Canada and
Alaska. He said that they told stories to their young of times,
even from past generations. David went on to say that the wolves of
Alaska are protected and do pass these stories on from a long time
ago, but the wolves in Canada are hunted and there are very few old
wolves to continue on with the stories. David Suzuki realizes that
these wolves, animals, do indeed communicate with other about past
times and have a language that can be communicated. I have also
read articles about whales doing the same thing, but old whales are
scarce now because of our hunting. Another article talked about
there were no old birds anymore, that our insecticide is killing
them off because of toxic increases in their bodies after only about
five years. I think all of these articles were in Scientific
American magazine, except for the David Suzuki one. But we do have
to listen to the animals and learn to listen to what they are
telling us about current events and what is coming up.